Aired: August 3, 2018

“An Outrage”: Reflections on Racism Past and Present

With: Hannah Ayers & Lance Warren

“An Outrage” is a documentary film about lynching in the American South, directed by Hannah Ayers and Lance Warren. Beginning with the end of the Civil War, and well into the middle of the twentieth century, the extralegal and socially sanctioned practice of lynching claimed the lives of at least 3,959 African American men, women and children.

With: Keith Clark (George Mason University)

Renowned author Ernest Gaines is a descendant of slaves who was raised in on a former Louisiana plantation. Keith Clark says Gaines many novels, including A Lesson Before Dying and The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, launched America’s interest in exploring African American history.

With: Charlottesville residents

With: Kelley Libby (With Good Reason)

For many Americans, August 12th marks a shift in the national conversation about white supremacy and racism. For the people who were injured in the Charlottesville attack that killed Heather Heyer, the 12th marks day one of a long process of recovery. We share the story of one person who was injured that day.

With: Jordy Yager, Jamelle Bouie, Collier Meyerson & Jenna Wortham

The Columbia Journalism Review recently convened a panel of journalists for “Race, Racism, and the News” in Charlottesville. We feature an excerpt from the discussion that includes local freelance reporter Jordy Yager, the New York Times’ Jenna Wortham, The Nation’s Collier Meyerson,and Slate chief political correspondent Jamelle Bouie.

Discussion

2 Comments on ““An Outrage”: Reflections on Racism Past and Present”

Very surprised that your show, in discussing Ernest Gaines, did not tell about him moving AT AGE 15, to Vallejo, California to be with his mother. He spent a lot of time in the old Carnegie library there reading / researching — and WRITING.